This page was migrated in July 2022 from my older website, biblicalambiguities.net. As such, it is subject to the biblicalambiguities-general-disclaimer and the biblicalambiguities-general-disclaimer.
23 July 2022
An abjad is a term for an alphabet without vowels. The Hebrew alphabet is an abjad, strictly speaking, and not a full alphabet with vowels like the Latin or Greek alphabets. The lack of vowels is made up for in part by matres lectionis, or, in the case of certain special texts like the Hebrew Bible, with the addition of nequdot.
As with other pages migrated from biblicalambiguities.net, this page may contain material paraphrased or even outright copied without direct attribution from the KJV, RV, ASV, JPS (1917), WEB, NHEB, Kittel's BH, the pre-1923 volumes of the ICC series, or the commentaries on Genesis of Dillmann, Skinner, and Driver. More details on this policy can be found here: biblicalambiguities-general-disclaimer and biblicalambiguities-translation-disclaimer.
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